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单词 die
释义 I. die, n.1|daɪ|
Pl. dice |daɪs|, dies |daɪz|. Forms: 4–5 dee, 6–8 dye, dy, 6– die. pl. 4 des, 4–5 dees, deys, dys, 4–6 dyse, dyce, 5–6 dis(e, (dysse, 6 dyyss), 5– dice; also 5–6 dyes, 5– dies. Also sing. 4– 5 dyse, 5–6 dyce, 5–7 dice; pl. 4–5 dyces, 5 dises, dices, dycys.
[Early ME. , dee, pl. dēs, dees, a. OF. de (nom. sing. and obl. pl. 12–14th c. dez), mod.F. , pl. dés = Pr. dat, datz, Cat. dau, Sp., It. dado; in form:—L. datum, subst. use of datus, -um ‘given’, pa. pple. of dare to give. It is inferred that, in late pop. L., datum was taken in the sense ‘that which is given or decreed (sc. by lot or fortune)’, and was so applied to the dice by which this was determined. Latinized mediæval forms from It. and Fr. were dadus, decius.
In late OF. the form dey occurs in 14th c.; and dez was sometimes used in sing. down to 17th c.: cf. the 14–17th c. Eng. use of dice as sing. The remarkable point in the history of the Eng. word is the change of , dēs, to , dȳs, (dyse, dyce, dice), in the ME. period. The oldest Chaucer MSS., Harl., Ellesm., Hengwrt, have dees, which also survived as late as 1484 in Caxton, but dys occurs in the other Chaucer MSS., and in rime in the Bodleian MS. of Kyng Alisaunder, part of which is in the Auchinleck MS., attributed to the middle of the 14th c. Before 1500, , dȳs seem to have completely passed from the ē into the ī class, the fortunes of which they have since shared. As in pence, the plural s retains its original breath sound, probably because these words were not felt as ordinary plurals, but as collective words; cf. the orig. plural truce, where the collective sense has now passed into a singular. This pronunciation is indicated in later spelling by -ce: cf. the umlaut plurals lice, mice, the inflexional forms hence, once, twice, since, and the words ice, nice, advice, device, defence, in all which -ce represents a phonetic and original -s. In the newer senses where the plural is not collective, a form |daɪz| of the ordinary type has arisen; cf. the non-collective later plural pennies.]
I. With plural dice. (The form dice (used as pl. and sing.) is of much more frequent occurrence in gaming and related senses than the singular die.)
1. a. A small cube of ivory, bone, or other material, having its faces marked with spots numbering from one to six, used in games of chance by being thrown from a box or the hand, the chance being decided by the number on the face of the die that turns uppermost. Also, a cube bearing other devices on its faces, or a solid with more or less than six faces (see quots.). b. pl. The game played with these; esp. in phr. at (the) dice.
(α) sing. dee, dye, dy, die.
1393Gower Conf. II. 209 The chaunce is cast upon a dee, But yet full oft a man may see [etc.].c1430Pilgr. Lyf Manhode i. cv. (1869) 56 Nouht so gret as a as in a dee.1570Levins Manip. 96/41 A dye, alea.1589Pappe w. Hatchet (1844) 23 Hee'le cogge the die.1610B. Jonson Alch. ii. i, You shall no more deale with the hollow die, Or the fraile card.1656Stanley Hist. Philos. viii. 85 So to cast the dy that it may chance right.1680Cotton Gamester in Singer Hist. Cards 336 He puts one dye into the box.1705S. Centlivre Gamester i. i, To teach you the management of the die.1779–81Johnson L.P., Butler Wks. II. 191 To throw a dye, or play at cards.1822Hazlitt Table-t. II. vii. 156 Dependent on the turn of a die, on the tossing up of a halfpenny.1838De Morgan Ess. Probab. 74 The real probability that 6000 throws with a die shall give exactly 1000 aces.1872F. Hall Exempl. False Philol. 68 The cast of a die is absolutely impossible of prediction.
(β) pl. des, dees, deys, dys, dyse, dyce, dise, dice.
c1330R. Brunne Chron. Wace (Rolls) 11392 Somme pleide wyþ des and tables.1340Ayenb. 45 Þe gemenes of des, and of tables.13..K. Alis. (MS. Laud Misc. 622) 3297 Þe rybaude pleieþ at þe dys [ed. Weber, deys] Swiþe selde þe fole is wys.c1386Chaucer Pard. T. 5 They daunce and pleyen at dees [so Harl., Heng.; Camb. deis, Petw. dys, Corp. dyse, Lansd. dise] bothe day and nyght.1387Trevisa Higden (Rolls) VII. 75 Pleyenge wiþ dees of gold.c1400Destr. Troy 1622 (MS. a 1500) The draghtes, the dyse, and oþer dregh gaumes.1474Caxton Chesse 127 In his lift hand thre dyse.1477Earl Rivers (Caxton) Dictes 109 His maistre pleyed gladly atte dise.1479in Eng. Gilds (1870) 422 The towne clerke to fynde theym Dice.1481–90Howard Househ. Bks. (Roxb.) 327 For a bale of dysse.1484Caxton Fables of Avian (1889) 21 Whiche doo no thynge but playe with dees and cardes.1495Act 11 Hen. VII, c. 2 §5 The Tenys, Closshe, Dise, Cardes, Bowles.1536R. Beerley in Four C. Eng. Lett. 35 Sume at cardes and sume at dyyss.1556Chron. Gr. Friars (Camden) 73 Wych playd wyth kynge Henry the viiite at dysse.1576Fleming Panopl. Epist. 340 In casting a paire of dyce.1580Baret Alv. D 656 The life of a man is like a game at the dice.1603Holland Plutarch's Rom. Quest. (1892) 57 Playing at dice with cokall bones.1697Dryden æneid ix. 452 From Dice and Wine the Youth retir'd to Rest.1784R. Bage Barham Downs II. 54 Lord Winterbottom is ruined by the dice.1821Byron Mar. Fal. iv. ii, They Have won with false dice.1871T. Taylor Jeanne Darc iii. i, Rough soldiers left their oaths, and dice, and lewdness.1874Macomb (Ill.) Eagle 23 Nov. 1/5 ‘Now, gentlemen,’ said she, ‘we will throw poker dice.’1910Encycl. Brit. VIII. 176/2 Eight-sided dice have comparatively lately been introduced in France as aids to children in learning the multiplication table.1927W. E. Collinson Contemp. Eng. 32 Crown and Anchor is played by means of dice marked with crowns, anchors, hearts, etc. and a board similarly marked.1960R. C. Bell Board & Table Games v. 125 Games with two-sided dice.Ibid. 141 Three special dice are used marked with a crown, an anchor, a heart, a spade, a diamond, and a club.
(γ) singular dice, plural dices: cf. obs. F. sing. dez.
1388Act 12 Rich. II, c. 6 §1 Les..jeues appellez coytes dyces, gettre de pere.c1425Voc. in Wr.-Wülcker 666 Hic talus, dyse.c1440Promp. Parv. 121/1 Dycyn, or pley wythe dycys, aleo.c1450Bk. Curtasye 228 in Babees Bk. 306 Ne at the dyces with him to play.1474Caxton Chesse 132 He caste thre dyse and on eche dyse was a sise.1483Cath. Angl. 99/1 A Dice, taxillus, alea.1552Huloet, Dice or die, alea, talus, thessera.1677Gale Crt. Gentiles iii. 100 Amongst the Grecians κυβεια signifies a Dice..the cast of a Dice was most casual and incertain.1751Mrs. E. Heywood Hist. Betsy Thoughtless IV. 202 Protesting never to touch a card or throw a dice again.
2. a. In figurative and allusive use; thus sometimes = Hazard, chance, luck.
1548Hall Chron., Hen. V 56 b, When kyng Henry perceived that the dice ranne not to his purpose, he abstained from the assaulte.1590Spenser F.Q. i. ii. 36 His harder fortune was to fall Under my speare; such is the dye of warre.1594Shakes. Rich. III, v. iv. 10, I haue set my life vpon a cast, And I will stand the hazard of the Dye.1676D'Urfey Mad. Fickle iv. i, The uncertain Dice of Fate thus far runs well.1693Dennis Imp. Crit. ii. 8 If that was his design, the Author has turn'd the Dice upon him, I gad.1742Young Nt. Th. vi. 37 When..th' important dye Of life and death spun doubtful, ere it fell, And turn'd up life.1844Disraeli Coningsby vi. vi, The immensity of the stake which he was hazarding on a most uncertain die.1871Morley Voltaire (1886) 169 France and Austria were both playing with cogged dice.
b. Phrases. (a) to make dice of (a person's) bones: see quot. 1646. (b) to set (put) the dice upon (any one): see quot. 1598. (c) the die is cast: the decisive step is taken; the course of action is irrevocably decided. (d) upon a or the die: depending upon a chance or contingency, in a critical position, at stake; so to set upon the die. (e) in the dice: liable to turn up, as a contingent possibility (cf. on the cards, card n.2 2 e). (f) In comparisons: as smooth, true, straight as a die. (g) Colloq. phr. no dice: (it is or was) useless, hopeless, unsuccessful, profitless, etc.; nothing; ‘nothing doing’ (orig. U.S.).
a.1591R. Turnbull Exp. St. James 103 They wil make dice of their bones, but they will haue the extremitie of them.1621Burton Anat. Mel. iii. i. iii. iii. (1676) 268/1 We will not relent..till we have confounded him and his, made dice of his bones, as they say, see him rot in prison.1646J. Cooke Vind. Law 22 We say proverbially ‘make dice of his bones’, the meaning whereof is, that if a prisoner die in execution, after the Crowner has viewed his body, the creditor hath dice delivered him at the Crowne Office as having all that he is likely to have.
b.1598Florio, Stancheggiare..to set the dice vpon one, to tyrannize ouer one.1658Whole Duty Man xii. §6. 94 Thou..takest this opportunity to set the dice upon him.1699Bentley Phal. Introd. 2 He will put the Dice upon his Readers, as often as he can.
c.1634Sir T. Herbert Trav. A iij b, Is the die cast, must At this one throw all thou hast gaind be lost?1720Ozell Vertot's Rom. Rep. II. xiii. 287 Cæsar..throws himself into the River..saying..It is done: The Die is thrown.1879G. Meredith Egoist xxvii. (1889) 262 The die is cast—I cannot go back.
d.1659D. Pell Impr. Sea 230 To recover her young when they are upon a dye.Ibid. 393 Ah poor soul..It will not now bee granted thee, when thou art upon thy dye.1821Byron Sardan. ii. i. 139 But here is more upon the die—a kingdom.1832Southey Hist. Penins. War III. 859 When Rochejaquelein.. set life and fortune thus upon the die.
e.1858De Quincey Greece under Rom. Wks. VIII. 317 It is hardly ‘in the dice’ that any downright novelty of fact should remain in reversion for this nineteenth century.
f.1530Palsgr. 629 Make this borde as smothe as a dyce, comme vng dez.1600Hakluyt Voy. (1810) III. 256 Goodly fields..as plaine and smoothe as any die.c1710C. Fiennes Diary (1888) 151 Y⊇ tide was out all upon the sands at Least a mile, wch was as smooth as a Die.a1732Gay Songs & Ball., New Song on New Similies, You'll know me truer than a die.1877Spry Cruise Challenger xiii. (ed. 7) 226 Arums climbing fifty feet up large trees as straight as a die.
g.1931D. Runyon Guys & Dolls (1932) 136 He is a guy I consider no dice.a1939R. Chandler Trouble is my Business (1950) 62 The old man's had a stroke... No dice there.Ibid. 222 No dice, sister. I'm putting the pressure on.1943P. Cheyney You can always Duck iv. 67 ‘She can come back here and go on driving a car.’ ‘No, sir,’ I tell him. ‘No dice. That dame has started bein' Mrs. Cara Travis an' she's goin' on bein' Mrs. Travis.’1952Wodehouse Barmy in Wonderland viii. 81, I was around at her bank this morning trying to find out what her balance was, but no dice. Fanny won't part.1959‘H. Howard’ Deadline iv. 47 She was on her way back to report that it was no dice.1959M. Pugh Chancer 10 Nothing doing. I'm not going. No dice.1968Globe & Mail (Toronto) 10 July 1/4 ‘It's no dice as far as I'm concerned,’ said one picket who made a derisive gesture.
3. a. A small cubical segment formed by cutting anything down. Also, a small cubical bullet (cf. die-shot).
c1390Form of Cury in Warner Antiq. Culin. 6 Take the noumbles of a calf, swyne, or of shepe, parboile hem, and skerne [? kerue] hem to dyce.1496Ld. Treas. Acc. Scotl. I. 295 For cutting of viijxx and ix dis of irne to the pellokis.1549Privy Council Acts (1890) II. 350 Dyce of yron. ijml; shott of stone, vc.a1628F. Greville Sidney (1652) 139 Wounded..with a square die out of a field-piece.1769Mrs. Raffald Eng. House-kpr. (1778) 141 Dish them up..with turnips and carrots cut in dice.1889B. Whitby Awakening M. Fenwick II. 166 She hacked her buttered toast into dice.
γ with dice in singular.
14..Anc. Cookery in Househ. Ord. (1790) 466 Take fresshe braune of a bore sothen, and cut hit in grete dices.c1420Liber Cocorum (1862) 38 Square as dises þou shalt hit make.1557Recorde Whetst. R ij, I haue a dice of Brasse of .64. vnces of Troye weighte.
b. With negative: never a dyse = not a bit, not in the least. Obs.
c1400Destr. Troy 808 Þai..shall..neuer dere hym a dyse.
II. with plural dies.
4. a. A cubical block; in Arch. a cubical or square block of stone forming part of a building; spec. the cubical portion of a pedestal, between the base and cornice; = dado 1. b. A square tablet.
1664Evelyn tr. Freart's Archit. 123 The Italians call it the Zoccolo, Pillow or Die (because of its Cubique and solid figure).1726Leoni Alberti's Archit. I. 13/1 A kind of little Wall, which we shall call the Plinth, others perhaps may call it the Dye.1730A. Gordon Maffei's Amphith. 240 Some Plinths, or rather Dyes, seen upon the second Cornish.Ibid. 265 Marble, cut thin in small square Dyes.a1748Watts (J.), Young creatures have learned spelling of words by having them pasted upon little flat tablets or dies.1832Gell Pompeiana I. vi. 109 The figures stand..upon little square plinths or dies.1854E. de Warren tr. De Saulcy's Dead Sea II. 224 The coping..is composed, first, of a cube, or die, measuring nearly six yards on each side.
5. An engraved stamp used for impressing a design or figure upon some softer material, as in coining money, striking a medal, embossing paper, etc.
Often used in pairs, which may be dissimilar, for impressing unlike designs on opposite sides of the thing stamped (as in coining), or corresponding, one in relief and one countersunk (as in an embossing stamp).
1699in M. Smith Mem. Secret Service App. 19 To bring or send to him some Deys..to coin some Mill'd Money.c1724Swift Consid. Wood's Coinage Wks. 1761 III. 164 There have been such variety of dyes made use of by Mr. Wood in stamping his money.1787T. Jefferson Writ. (1859) II. 123 The workman..brought me..the medal in gold, twenty-three in copper, and the dye.1862T. Morrall Needle-making 16 Making sail and packing needles..by means of dies fixed in a stamp, after the manner of making buttons.1879H. Phillips Addit. Notes Coins 1 The portrait is reduced..to the size it is to occupy on the die.1879Cassell's Techn. Educ. IV. 263/1 The die..is a block of steel welded in a larger block of iron, the impression of the intended work cut in its face.
6. The name of various mechancial appliances:
spec. a. One of two or more pieces (fitted in a stock) to form a segment of a hollow screw for cutting the thread of a screw or bolt. b. The bed-piece serving as a support for metal from which a piece is to be punched, and having an opening through which the piece is driven. c. Forging. A device consisting of two parts which act together to give to the piece swaged between them the desired form. d. Brick-making. A mouth-piece or opening through which the clay is forced, serving to mould it into the required form. e. A part of the apparatus used in crushing ore: see quot. 1881. f. Shoemaking, etc. A shaped knife for cutting out blanks of any required shape and size: cf. die v.2
1812–6J. Smith Panorama Sc. & Art I. 39 The best outside screws are..cut with what are called stocks or dies.1833Holland Manuf. Metal II. 197 The interstices are then filled by the insertion of the hardened steel dies.1856Farmer's Mag. Nov. 406 (Brick-making) The mouthpiece or die is about half-an-inch deeper and half an inch broader than the stream of clay after it passes through the moulding rollers to the cutting apparatus.a1875Chamberlain in Ure Dict. Arts I. 529 As soon as it has..forced the clay of one box through the die..the plunger returns and empties [the other] box of clay through a die on the opposite side.1881Raymond Mining Gloss., Die, a piece of hard iron, placed in a mortar to receive the blow of a stamp, or in a pan to receive the friction of the muller. Between the die and the stamp or muller the ore is crushed.1885Harper's Mag. LXX. 282 By means of ‘dies’, or sole-shaped knives, in a die-machine, required shapes, sizes, and widths are cut out. Before the use of dies, soles were ‘rounded out’ by hand..Steam-power and revolving die-block [were] applied in 1857.
7. Sc. ‘A toy, a gewgaw’ (Jamieson).
(Also in nursery language die-die. Identity with this word is doubtful.)
1808Jamieson, Die, a toy, a gewgaw, Loth.1816Scott Antiq. xxi, ‘The bits o' weans wad up..and toddle to the door, to pu' in the auld Blue-Gown that mends a' their bonny dies.’1816Old Mort. x, ‘Ye hae seen the last o' me, and o' this bonny die too’, said Jenny, holding between her finger and thumb a splendid silver dollar.
III. 8. attrib. and Comb. a. die-like, die-shaped adjs.; die-block, die-machine (see 6 f); die-bone, the cuboid bone of the tarsus; die-shot, shot of cubical form, dice-shot; die-sinker, an engraver of dies for stamping (see 5); so die-sinking; die-stake: see quot. 1874; die-stock, the stock or handle for holding the dies used in cutting screws (see 6 a); die-wise a. and adv., in the manner of a die, in a cubical form.
1634T. Johnson Parey's Chirurg. 234 It is knit by Synarthrosis to the *Die-bone.
1875Ure Dict. Arts II. 29 This must..be left to the experience of the *die-forger.
1688R. Holme Armoury iii. 378/1 A..*Die-like figure four square every way; a square solid.
1875Ure Dict. Arts II. 29 The very cross-grained, or highly crystalline steel..acquires fissures under the *die-press.
1878Huxley Physiogr. 148 A huge *die-shaped mass of stone.
1581Styward Mart. Discipl. ii. 143 Such as haue *die shot..contrarie to the Cannons & lawes of the field.
1815Chron. in Ann. Reg. 317/2 Employed by..*dye sinkers and ornamental engravers.1893Daily News 3 July 2/7 Medallists and die-sinkers have been very busy..in view of the Royal wedding.
1874Knight Dict. Mech. I. 592 s.v. Coining-press, The lower die is on what is termed the *die-stake, and gives the reverse impression.
1863Smiles Indust. Biogr. 238 He..seems to have directed his attention to screw-making..and [made] a pair of very satisfactory *die-stocks.
1674N. Fairfax Bulk & Selv. 128 In *die wise or cubically.1702Thoresby in Phil. Trans. XXV. 1864 The heads not Die-wise, as the large Nails now are, but perfectly flat.
b. Combs. with the pl. form dice, as dice-cogging, dice-gospeller, dice-maker; dice-board, a board upon which dice are thrown; dice-coal (see quot.); dice-headed a., having a cubical boss or stud (of nails used for strengthening doors, etc.); dice holes (see quot.); dice-man, a sharper who cheats with dice; dice-shot = die-shot (see die); dice-top, a top of polygonal form with numbers marked on its faces, a teetotum. Also dice-box, -play, etc.
1844Thirlwall Greece VIII. 453 Mummius..had as little eye for them as any of his men, who made *dice-boards of the finest master-pieces of painting.
1842Brande, *Dice-coal, a species of coal easily splitting into cubical fragments.
1852Thackeray Esmond i. xiii, I played a *dice-cogging scoundrel in Alsatia for his ears.
1550Latimer Serm. at Stamford Wks. I. 269 Among so great a number of gospellers, some are card-gospellers, some are *dice-gospellers, some are pot-gospellers; all are not good.
1497Ld. Treas. Acc. Scot. I. 357 Vc ȝet nalis *dis hedit to Dunbar.1593in Willis & Clark Cambridge (1886) I. 74, 100 dicheaded nailes pro ostio.
1882Caulfeild & Saward Dict. Needlework 153 *Dice Holes..a stitch..used in Honiton..lace.
1530Palsgr. 213/2 *Dice maker, dessier.1714Mandeville Fab. Bees (1725) I. 81 Card and dice-makers..are the immediate ministers to a legion of vices.
1871Echo 14 Mar., *Dice-men and thimble-rigs were scattered here and there, making a fine harvest.
1588Lucar Colloq. Arte Shooting App. 57 Chaine shot..*dice shot.1668J. White Rich Cab. (ed. 4) 124 Square pieces of iron, called dice-shot.
1894Maskelyne Sharps & Flats 257 That well-known device, the ‘*dice-top’ or ‘teetotum’.
II. die, n.2 slang.
[f. die v.1]
Only in phr. to make a die (of it) = to die.
1611Cotgr., Fouïr aux taupes, to turne vp the heeles; goe feed wormes, make a dy.Ibid., Tirer les chausses, to kicke vp the heeles; to make a dye.1819Metropolis I. 58 I thought he was going to make a die of it! Why, he's as old as the Hills.1883Century Mag. XXVI. 238/2, ‘I believe you're trying to make a die of it’, said the doctor.
III. die, v.1|daɪ|
Pa. tense and pple. died |daɪd|; pres. pple. dying |ˈdaɪɪŋ|. Forms α. 2–4 deȝ-en, dei-e(n, 3 deiȝ-en, deaiȝ-e, 4 day-e, 4–5 deghe, 4–6 dei(e, dey(e, (5 deyn), 4–6 (north.) de, 4– dee. β. 4–5 diȝ-en, dyȝ-en, digh-e, dygh-e, dy-en, di-en, 4–7 diy, (5 dyi), 4–8 dye, 4– die. pa. tense α. 3 deiȝede, dæide, deaide, 3–5 deid(e, 4 daide, dayed, deȝed, deied(e; north. deyt, ded, 4–5 deyd(e, deyed, 5 deghit, -et, -t, 5– north. deed, deit, deet. β. 4 dyede, 4–5 dyde, 4–6 dide, (5 dyet), 4–8 dyed, 4– died.
[Early ME. dēȝen, dēghen, corresp. to ON. deyja (orig. døyja, OSw. and ODa. döia, Da. döe, Sw. ), OFris. deia, deja, OS. dóian, OHG. touwan, MHG. töuwen; these represent an OTeut. strong verb of the 6th ablaut class *daw-j-an, pa. tense dôw, pa. pple. dawan-, the strong inflexions being retained in ON. (dó-:—*dów, dáinn:—*dawans). In the other langs. and in Eng. a regular weak verb. No instance of the word is known in OE. literature (its sense being expressed by steorfan, sweltan, or the periphrastic wesan déad, pa. tense wæs déad: see dead 1 d) hence it is generally held to have been early lost in OE. (as in Gothic, and as subsequently in all the continental WGer. langs.), and re-adopted in late OE. or early ME. from Norse; but some think that the facts point rather to the preservation of an OE. díeᵹan, déᵹan, in some dialect; the word appears to have been in general use from the 12th c., even in the s.w. dialects (see Napier in Hist. Holy Rood, E.E.T.S., 1894). The ME. dēȝen, dēghen came regularly down to 1500 as deye, which was retained in the North as dey, , dee (still current from Lancashire to Scotland); but in standard English dēghe was in 14th c. (in conformity with the common phonetic history of OE. eh, eah, eoh, as in dye, eye, fly, high, lie, nigh, thigh, etc.) narrowed to diȝe, dighe, whence the later dye, die.
The oldest text of Cursor M. (Cotton) has only dey; in the later texts this is frequently altered to dighe, dye, when not in rime, in the late Trinity MS. sometimes even in rime, with change of text. Chaucer used both dey and dye, the C.T. (Ellesm. MS.) contains in the rimes 22 examples of deye and 50 of dye. Both forms are also used in the Wyclifite version, and both occur in Caxton's works.
The stem dau- appears also in Gothic in the ppl. a. dauþs, OE. déad (:—daud-oz) dead, and the n. dauþus, OE. déaþ, death n.; also in afdôjan (:—afdôwjan), pa. pple. afdauid- (:—afdôwid-) vexed, worried. (The relationship of Gothic diwanô, undiwanei, etc. is uncertain.) The simple verb has shown a notable tendency to die out, and leave its place to be taken by derivatives: thus in Gothic dauþnan to die.]
I. Of man and sentient beings.
* literally.
1. a. intr. To lose life, cease to live, suffer death; to expire.
The proper word for this, and more especially for the cessation of life by disease or natural decay (to which it is often restricted dialectally), but also used of all modes of death, as ‘to die in battle’, ‘at the stake’, ‘at the hands of justice’.
(α) Forms deȝ-e(n, dey-e(n, deiȝ-e(n, dei-e(n, day, de, dee. (After 1500, north. Eng. and Sc.)
c1135Holy Rood (1894) 14 Forþan ðe ic nu deȝen sceal.c1205Lay. 28893 Þe alde king deȝede.Ibid. 31796 Al folc gon to deȝen.a1225Ancr. R. 108 Me schal er deien.Ibid. 110 He þolede sundri pine, & deiȝede.c1290S. Eng. Leg. I. 62/311 Heo deide þane þridde day.a1300Cursor M. 24139 (Edin.) Latte vs deien samin [Cott. dei, Fairf. deye].13..Ibid. 16762 + 119 (Cott.) Him was not geue..plas, War-on he miȝt dee fayre..but deed heȝe in þe air.13..Ibid. 11323 (Gött.) Þat heo dede suld neuer dei, Til he suld se crist self wit ei [Trin. MS. deȝe, eȝe].13..Sir Beues 3135 Þat emperur neȝ daide, His wif confortede him & saide.1375Barbour Bruce i. 430 Hys fadyr..deyt tharfor in my presoun.c1380Sir Ferumb. 5738 Ech man schal rysen on such aray As he dayeþ ynne.c1380Wyclif Wks. (1880) 296 Crist deyede to destrie þis heresye & alle his martyrs aftir deyeden.1382Rom. xiv. 8 Where we deien, we deien to the Lord.c1386Chaucer Prioress' T. 82 And eek hire for to preye To been oure help and socour when we deye.c1400Destr. Troy 921 All dropet the dule as he degh wold.Ibid. 9551 The buerne deghet.a1420Sir Amadace (Camden) lxxii, Thenne sone aftur the kinge deet.c1440Promp. Parv. 117 Deyyn, morior.c1460Towneley Myst. (Surtees) 40 It gars me quake for ferd to dee.c1470Henry Wallace ii. 127 Than wist he nocht of no help, bot to de.1483Caxton Gold. Leg. 142/2 Hys fader and moder deyden.c1489Sonnes of Aymon iii. 79 Noble knyghtes deyeng full myserably vpon the erthe.a1500Nutbrown Maid xxiv. in Arnolde's Chron. (1811) 202, I [shal] dey sone after ye be gone.1552Lyndesay Monarche 6114 Neuer to de agane.a1605Montgomerie Sonn. lix. 5 To see Sa many lovers, but redemption, dee.a1800W. Douglas Song, For bonnie Annie Lawrie, I'd lay me down and dee.1861E. Waugh Birtle Carter's Tale 11 Yo desarven a comfortable sattlement i'th top shop when yo dee'n.
(β) Forms diȝ-e(n, dy-e(n, di-e(n, dye, dy, die.
c1330R. Brunne Chron. Wace (Rolls) 14306 He was so wounded, he most dye.13..Cursor M. 7959–60 (Gött.) For þu sal witt þat i sal noght lye Þe son of barsabe he sal die [Cott. lei, dei, Fairf. legh, degh, Trin. lyȝe, diȝe].13..Guy Warw. (A.) 630 Felice said to Gij, þou dost folie Þatow wilt for mi loue dye.13..E.E. Allit. P. A. 306 Þaȝ fortune dyd your flesch to dyȝe.13..Song of Yesterday 87 in E.E.P. (1862) 135 A mon þat nou parteþ and dis [rime wys].1382Wyclif Rev. xiv. 13 Blessid the deede men, that dien in the Lord.c1386Chaucer Miller's T. 627 And for the smert he wende for to dye, As he were wood for wo he gan to crye.a1400–50Alexander 1260 (Ashm. MS.) To do as driȝten wald deme & dyi [MS. D. dye] all togedire.1477Sir J. Paston in Paston Lett. No. 806 III. 207 Yf I dyghe ny the Cyte of London.1483Cath. Angl. 99 To Die, mori.1523Ld. Berners Froiss. I. cccxv. 485 To dye in prison.1553T. Wilson Rhet. (1567) 19 b, Undoubtedly, the lawier neuer dieth a begger.1556Chron. Gr. Friars (Camden) 3 Thys yere this kynge Henry the thirde dyde.1633Earl of Manchester Al Mondo (1636) 142 He that will live when he dyes, must dye while hee lives.1635A. Stafford Fem. Glory (1869) 147 Her armes express the Crosse whereon He dide.1651Hobbes Leviath. ii. xix. 99 Not onely Monarchs, but also whole Assemblies dy.1667Milton P.L. vii. 544 In the day thou eat'st, thou di'st.1695Woodward Nat. Hist. Earth (1723) 28 The Shell-fish..live and dye there.1712Pope Spect. No. 48 ⁋6 Little Spirits that are born and die with us.1727–38Gay Fables i. xxvii. 50 So groaned and dy'd.1728Newton Chronol. Amended 37 Some of these Archons might dye before the end of the ten years.1769Johnson in Boswell Life (1847) 211 It matters not how a man dies, but how he lives.1807Wordsw. White Doe vii. 315 At length, thus faintly, faintly tied To earth, she was set free, and died.1847Tennyson Princ. vi Song 4 She must weep or she will die.
b. Const. To die of a malady, hunger, old age, or the like; by violence, the sword, his own hand; from a wound, inattention, etc.; through neglect; on or upon the cross, the scaffold, at the stake, in battle; for a cause, object, reason, or purpose, for the sake of one; formerly also with a disease, the sword, etc.; on his enemies (i.e. falling dead above them). In earlier use the prepositions were employed less strictly.
c1200Ormin 8656 Siþþenn shule witt anan Off hunngerr deȝenn baþe.c1330R. Brunne Chron. Wace (Rolls) 850 Of his burþe his moder deide.c1340Cursor M. App. ii. 887 (B.M. Add. MS.) No womman..dien ne schal of hure childe.c1400Destr. Troy 6528 All þat met hym..dyet of his dynttes.1483Caxton G. de la Tour D v, Yf they ete of that fruyte they shold deye of it.1580Baret Alv. D 643 To die of the plague.1590Shakes. Mids. N. ii. i. 130 She being mortall, of that boy did die.15972 Hen. IV Epil. 31 Falstaffe shall dye of a Sweat.1658–9E. Bodvile in Hatton Corr. (1878) 17 Like to diy of the small pox.1716Addison Drummer v. i, The wound of which he dy'd.1796Burns Lett. Mr. Cunningham 7 July, If I die not of disease, I must perish with hunger.1892Du Maurier Peter Ibbetson 247 I thought I must die of sheer grief.
1382Wyclif Ezek. v. 12 The thridde part of thee shal die bi pestilence.a1631Donne Poems (1650) 10 We can dye by it, if not live by love.1643Denham Cooper's H. 315 Disdains to dye By common hands.1683Col. Rec. Pennsylv. I. 95 A Calfe that Dyed, as they thought by Witch⁓craft.
c1340Cursor M. 26847 (Fairf.) Oft man deys þorou [Cott. of] an wounde.1382Wyclif Num. xvi. 29 If thurȝ vsid deeth of men thei dien.Ibid. xxiii. 10 Dye my soule thurȝ the deeth of riȝtwise men.Mod. If the child had died through neglect.
13..Cursor M. 17153 (Cott.), I haf..ded on þis rode tre.Ibid. 9039 (Gött.) God þat dide apon þe rode.c1400Destr. Troy 427 Whan Criste on the crosse for our care deghit.1675Brooks Gold. Key Wks. 1867 V. 90 He that died on the cross was long a-dying.1820T. Kelly Hymn, We sing the praise..Of him who died upon the cross.
a1300Cursor M. 16762 + 89 (Cott.) When þou deed for drede.c1300Havelok 840, I wene that we deye mone For hunger.c1380Wyclif Wks. (1880) 8 Redy to dye for cristin mennus soulis.c1489Caxton Blanchardyn vii. 27 heading, The whiche deyde for sorowe.1552Huloet, Dye for the loue of a womanne, Perire feminam.1553T. Wilson Rhet. (1580) 177, I can not chappe these textes in Scripture, if I should die for it.1580Baret Alv. D 643 Willing to die for ones safetie.1581G. Pettie Guazzo's Civ. Conv. iii. (1586) 129, I should die for verie shame.1599Hakluyt Voy. II. ii. 73 Shortly after they all die for hunger and cold.1600Shakes. A.Y.L. iv. i. 108 Men haue died from time to time, and wormes haue eaten them, but not for loue.1654Whitlock Zootomia 121 Though he dye for it, he cannot think of it.1655H. Vaughan Silex Scint. i. Ded. (1858) 15 My God! thou that didst dye for me.1713Steele Guardian No. 17 ⁋7 But child..can you see your mother die for hunger.1832Tennyson May Queen 21 They say he's dying all for love.Mod. To die for one's opinions.
1382Wyclif Jer. xvi. 4 With dethes of siknyngus thei shul die.c1386Chaucer Monk's T. 711 The place in which he schulde dye With boydekyns.c1400Destr. Troy 8273 Thow dowtles shall dye with dynt of my hond.a1612Donne βιαθανατος (1644) 52 Annibal..dyed with poyson which he alwaies carryed in a ring.a1672Wood Life (1848) 8 His grandmother Penelopie..died with grief.1692E. Walker Epictetus' Mor. xvi, To dye with Thirst and Hunger.
1591Shakes. Two Gent. ii. iv. 114 Ile die on him that saies so but your selfe.1712–14Pope Rape Lock v. 78 Nor fear'd the Chief th' unequal fight to try, Who sought no more than on his foe to die.
c. To die in a state or condition.
a1300Cursor M. 25850 (Cott.) Qua þat dees in dedli sin sal duell in bale.1382Wyclif Jer. xxxi. 30 Eche in his wickednesse shal die.1549Compl. Scot. iii. 25 Cleopatra vas lyike to dee in melancolie.1552Huloet, Dye in great debte, Relinquere debitum.1703Maundrell Journ. Jerus. (1732) Lett. ii. 3 To dye in the Romish Communion.1784Cowper Tiroc. 150 Would die at last in comfort, peace, and joy.Mod. He died in poverty and neglect.
d. To die poor, a beggar, a martyr, a millionaire, etc.
a1225Ancr. R. 108 Heo ouh for to deien martir in hire meseise.1393Gower Conf. II. 55 Lo, thus she deiede a wofull maide.1553[see 1 β.].1671Milton P.R. iii. 422 But so dy'd Impenitent.1683Salmon Doron Med. i. 17 They dye (as it were) laughing.1781Cowper Retirement 14 Having lived a trifler, died a man.1842Tennyson Vision of Sin iv. 144 Yet we will not die forlorn.1883Century Mag. XXV. 765/1 Her old friend had died a bankrupt.1894Wolseley Marlborough I. 246 He was every inch a sailor, and died an Admiral.
e. to die on (someone): (a) to die in the presence of or while in the charge or care of (someone); (b) to cease to function for or be of use to (someone); to cease to interest.
1907J. M. Synge Aran Islands i. 47 A farmer was in great distress as his crops had failed, and his cow had died on him.1930Kipling Limits & Renewals (1932) 243, I decided to drive in on a gust under the spitfire-sprit—and, if she answered her helm before she died on us, to humour her a shade to starboard.1931Times Lit. Suppl. 10 Dec. 1002/4 Carruthers drank all New York could give him for thirty-six hours and..the ‘drink died on him’. Well, sometimes the novel dies on Mr. Waugh. That happened this time.1934A. Thirkell Wild Strawberries iii. 53 Let Weston know that the horn died on us this morning, so he'd better fix it up.1936J. Tickell See how they Run iv. 44 ‘I want to look after her while she's in England.’ ‘Suppose she died on you?’1936C. Day Lewis Friendly Tree vi. 80 That was one thing which had not died on her—the love of birds.
2. to die a (specified) death: to die by or suffer a particular death.
Death prob. represents the OE. déaþe instrumental, in déaþe sweltan, L. morte mori: it was in ME. also preceded by various prepositions, on, in, a, o, of, by, with; but is now generally treated as a cognate object. In die a death, a was prob. originally the preposition = on, o (see quots. c 1200, c 1386) but came to be treated as the indefinite article.
a. with instrumental case, or equivalent preposition.
[c900ælfred's Laws 14. 15 in Thorpe I. 48 (Bosw.) He sceal deaþe sweltan.a1175Cott. Hom. 221 Þu scealt deaðe sweltan.c1200Trin. Coll. Hom. 181 Þu shalt a deðe swelte.]13..Cursor M. 660 (Cott.) O [Fairf. Wit, Gött. Of, Trin. On] duble ded þan sal ȝee dei.1382Wyclif Gen. ii. 17 In what euer day sotheli thow etist there of, with deth thow shalt die [1388 Thou schalt die by deeth [Vulg. morte morieris]].1382Judg. xiii. 22 Bi deeth die we [Vulg. morte moriemur], for we han seen the Lord.1382Ezek. xxviii. 10 In deeth of vncircumcydid men, thou shalt die.c1386Chaucer Melib. ⁋606 Bettre it is to dye of [so 5 MSS.; Harl. on, Petw. a] bitter deeth.c1450Merlin 52, I knowe not what deth this fole shall on dye.c1477Caxton Jason 42 If I dye not of bodily deth I shal dye of spirituel deth.1483G. de la Tour G v, Your sone deyd this nyght of a good dethe.c1500Melusine 247 To deye of an euyl deth.1625–6Purchas Pilgrims II. 1041 He died of his naturall death.
b. without preposition.
13..Sir Beues 341, I ne reche, what deþ he diᵹe, Siþþe he be cold.13..Cursor M. 952 (Gött.) And siþen dobil dede to dei [Cott., Fairf. wit, Trin. on doubel deþ].Ibid. 10917 (Gött.) He þat first na dede miht die [Cott. na ded moght drei].c1460Towneley Myst. (Surtees) 6 Thou shalle dye a dulfulle dede.a1533Ld. Berners Huon cxxv. 453 He wolde cause the emperour to dye an yll dethe.1535Coverdale Num. xxiii. 10 My soule die y⊇ death of y⊇ righteous, and my ende be as the ende of these.1598Shakes. Merry W. iv. ii. 158 He shall dye a Fleas death.1602Warner Alb. Eng. ix. xlv. (1612) 212 But twentie two a naturall death did die.1610Shakes. Temp. i. i. 72, I would faine dye a dry death.1611Bible John xviii. 32 Signifying what death he should die.1687Settle Refl. Dryden 85 I'le die a thousand deaths before I'le do so or so.1832Tennyson Miller's Dau. xii, Love dispell'd the fear That I should die an early death.
c. to die the death: to suffer death, to be put to death.
Dr. Johnson (Shaks. (1765) I. 311) says ‘‘die the death’ seems to be a solemn phrase for death inflicted by law.’
1535Coverdale Judg. xiii. 22 We must dye the death, because we haue sene God [Wyclif Bi deeth die we].1581Lambarde Eiren. ii. vii. (1588) 269 If one do burne a dwelling house maliciously, he shall die the death for it.1590Shakes. Mids. N. i. i. 65 Either to dye the death, or to abiure For euer the society of men.1611Cymb. iv. ii. 97 Dye the death: When I haue slaine thee with my proper hand, Ile follow those that euen now fled hence.1801Southey Thalaba ix. xxxix, And in that wild and desperate agony Sure Maimuna had died the utter death.1859Tennyson Lancelot & Elaine 866 [He] had died the death In any knightly fashion for her sake.
3. a. In various phrases, describing the manner or condition of death. (Sometimes fig.: cf. 10.)
to die game, to maintain a bold and defiant bearing to the last, i.e. like a gamecock; whence by contrast to die dung-hill; to die hard, i.e. with difficulty, reluctantly, not without a struggle; to die in one's bed, i.e. of illness or other natural cause, the opposite of which is to die in one's shoes; to die in one's boots or shoes or die with one's boots on: to die a violent death, spec. to be hanged; so to die with one's boots off: to have a peaceful or unspectacular death or end; to die in harness, i.e. in full work; to die in the last ditch, i.e. in defending the last ditch of an entrenchment, to fight to the last extremity; and in other similar phrases.
1523Ld. Berners Froiss. I. lxxxiv. 107 We shall not forsake you to dye in the quarrell.Ibid. I. ccvi. 243 Tyll he had made an ende of his warr..or els to dye in the payne.1631Rutherford Lett. ii. ix. (1881) 384 It cannot stand with his honour to die in the burrows.1663Flagellum, or O. Cromwell Pref. (1672) 3 He had the fortune..to dye in his bed.1694, etc. [see shoe n. 2 d].a1700B. E. Dict. Cant. Crew, Die like a Dog, to be hang'd..Die on a Fish-day, or in his shoes, the same. Die like a Rat, to be poysoned.1712Hearne Collect. (Oxf. Hist. Soc.) III. 341 He dy'd in his Shoes; his Domesticks say of an Apoplexie.a1715Burnet Own Time (1766) I. 457 There was a sure way never to see it lost, and that was to die in the last ditch.1784Gentl. Mag. LIV. i. 19/1 The only solicitude too many of them discover is, whether the criminals die hard, according to the Tyburn phrase.1805Ann. Reg. 370 Declaring, in cant terms, that they would ‘die game’.1811Syd. Smith Wks. (1867) I. 203 Nothing dies so hard..as intolerance.1825On Bull-baiting ii. (Houlston Tracts I. xxviii. 5), I don't intend to die dunghill.1863Fawcett Pol. Econ. ii. xi. (1876) 294 Reform is slow, and abuses die hard.1867Homeward Mail 16 Nov. 951/2 Mr. P. A. Dyke has died in harness at his post as Government agent.1868M. Pattison Academ. Org. v. 129 Learning in Oxford died hard and yielded up its breath not without many a struggle.1870Spurgeon Treas. Dav. Ps. x. 15 Very few great persecutors have ever died in their beds.1871Freeman Norm. Conq. (1876) IV. xvii. 42 Men who..had actually died in arms against him.1873J. H. Beadle Undevel. West xxii. 435 It will be said in Western dialect. ‘They died in their Boots’.1873J. Miller Life amongst Modocs vi. 75 If you keep on slinging your six-shooter around loose..you will..die with your boots on.1875Stubbs Const. Hist. III. xxi. 544 Like most medieval workers they all died in harness.1888[see hard adv. 3].1895W. Rye E. Angl. Gloss. 21 Died with his boots on, viz. died a violent death.1903Masefield Ballads 22 So I'm for drinking honestly, and dying in my boots.1946B. Sutton Jungle Pilot 99 An aircraft which ends its career by dying with its ‘boots off’ and being deliberately burnt to ashes on the ground is a sight at once undignified and pathetic.1959Listener 6 Aug. 200/1 They died with their boots on; they hardly ever surrendered.
b. never say die: never consent or resign oneself to death; never give in.
1837Dickens Pickw. ii, Never say die—down upon your luck.1880Payn Confid. Agent III. 161 Never say die while there's a shot in the locker.
c. (I) hope (or wish) I may die, (I) hope to die, etc.: colloq. asseverations of the truth of what one says.
1865Dickens Mut. Fr. II. iii. xi. 100 ‘Wish I may die,’ cried Mr. Riderhood, with a hoarse laugh, ‘if I warn't a goin' to say the self-same words to you.’1899R. Whiteing No. 5 John St. xxiv. 244, I see it in the piper. Wish I may die!1912Mulford & Clay Buck Peters xvii. 160 ‘There's a Witch's Ring right here on the range!’ ‘Nonsense!’ ‘Hope I may die! I'll show you, to-morrow.’1926[see cross v. 3 b].1927I. Gershwin Let's Kiss & Make Up 2, I didn't mean to start any scene to make you sigh. Hope to die!1968M. Allingham Cargo of Eagles xi. 133 ‘Off the record?’ ‘Never a word, may I die.’
4. To suffer the pains or dangers of death; to face death.
1382Wyclif 1 Cor. xv. 31 Ech day I deie for ȝoure glorie, britheren.1526–34Tindale ibid., By oure reioysinge which I have in Christ Iesu oure Lorde, I dye dayly.1633[see 1 β].
** transf. and fig.
5. Theol. To suffer spiritual death; ‘To perish everlastingly’ (J.): cf. death n. 5.
1340Hampole Pr. Consc. 8159 Þai salle ay deghand lyf, and lyfand dyghe, And ever-mare payns of ded þus dryghe.1382Wyclif Ezek. xviii. 4 The soule that shal synne, the ilk shal die.1552Bk. Com. Prayer Burial of Dead, And whosoever liveth, and believeth in him, shall not die eternally.1627Hakewill Apol. (1630) 512 So long as God shall liue, so long shall the damned die.
6. to die unto: to cease to be under the power or influence of; to become dead unto: cf. Rom. vi. 2.
1648Westm. Assembly's Shorter Catech. Q. 35 Sanctification..whereby we..are enabled more and more to die unto sin, and live unto righteousness.
7. a. To suffer pains identified with those of death; (often hyperbolical) to languish, pine away with passion; to be consumed with longing desire; to die for, to desire keenly or excessively.
1591Lyly Endym. i. iv, The lady that he delights in, and dotes on every day, and dies for ten thousand times a day.1593Nashe Christ's T. 33 a, He saw him swallow downe a bitte that he dyde for.1599Shakes. Much Ado iii. ii. 69 And in despight of all, dies for him.1610Temp. iii. i. 79 And much lesse take What I shall die to want.a1631Donne Poems (1650) 14 Deare, I die As often as from thee I goe.1711Addison Spect. No. 86 ⁋2 Nothing is more common than for lovers to..languish, despair, and dye in dumb show.1832Tennyson Eleänore 141–8, I die with my delight..I would be dying evermore, So dying ever, Eleänore.Mod. colloq. I am dying for a drink.
b. to be dying to do (something): to long greatly.
1709Prior Celia to Damon 8 That durst not tell me, what I dy'd to hear.1711Steele Spect. No. 254 ⁋3 She dies to see what demure and serious Airs Wedlock has given you.1780F. Burney Diary May, Mrs. Bowdler has long been dying to come to the point.1786Ibid. 17 July, Miss P—, who was..dying with impatience to know..everything about me.1832L. Hunt Sir R. Esher (1850) 83 The secret was dying to escape him.1893G. Allen Scallywag I. 20 The pretty American's dying to see you.
c. Used hyperbolically to indicate extreme feelings of amusement, embarrassment, etc.; esp. in phr. to die with or die of laughing.
1596Shakes. Tam. Shr. iii. ii. 243 Went they not quickly, I should die with laughing.1606Tr. & Cr. i. iii. 176 At this sport Sir Valour dies; cries..giue me ribs of Steele, I shall split all In pleasure of my Spleene.1778F. Burney Diary 23 Aug., An account he gave us..would have made you die with laughing.1796Jane Austen Pride & Prej. vi. (1813) 194, I was ready to die of laughter.1820M. Wilmot Let. 12 Jan. (1935) 50 Once in a tender love speech, I thought I should have died, when Lady Grace..told him audibly he had turned over two leaves!a1930D. H. Lawrence Phoenix II (1968) 84 He looked like a positive saint: one of the noble sort, you know, that will suffer with head up and with dreamy eyes. I nearly died of laughing.1949D. Smith I capture Castle xi. 190 She knew some of the manaquins [sic] at a dress show—I could have died.1969Widdowson & Halpert in Halpert & Story Christmas Mumming in Newfoundland 162 He was dressed up, you know, and he was like an old shepherd. Well I nearly died.
d. To experience a sexual orgasm. (Most common as a poetical metaphor in the late 16th and 17th cent.)
1599Shakes. Much Ado iii. ii. 70 Claudio. Nay, but I know who loues him..and in despight of all, dies for him. Prince. Shee shall be buried with her face vpwards.a1631Donne Elegies Songs & Sonnets (1965) 39 Once I lov'd and dyed; and am now become Mine Epitaph and Tombe. Here dead men speake their last, and so do I; Love-slaine, loe, here I lye.1673Dryden Marriage a-la-mode iv. ii, Now die, my Alexis, and I will die too.1680Rochester Poems 71 In love, 'tis equal measure. The Victor lives with empty pride, The Vanquisht dye with pleasure.1714Pope Rape of Lock v. 45 Nor fear'd the Chief th'unequal Fight to try, Who sought no more than on his Foe to die.1923D. H. Lawrence Birds, Beasts & Flowers 20 That's how the fig dies..Like a prostitute, the bursten fig, making a show of her secret. That's how women die too.1961R. Amato in Landfall Sept. 200 You're nice, though. You make me die every time.1974J. Denver Annie's Song (sheet-music) 4 Come let me love you... Let me die in your arms.
II. Of non-sentient objects, substances, qualities, actions.
8. a. Of plants, flowers, or organized matter: To lose vegetative life; to cease to be subject to vital forces; to pass into a state of mortification or decomposition.
1382Wyclif 1 Cor. xv. 36 That thing that thou sowist, is not quykenyd, no but it deie first.c1420Pallad. on Husb. iii. 642 Thai wol multiplie There as all other treen and herbes deye.1513Douglas æneis ix. vii. 149 Lyke as the purpour flour..Dwynis away, as it doith faid or de.1573Tusser Husb. (1878) 85 Good quickset bie, Old gatherd will die.1599Shakes. Hen. V, v. ii. 42 Her Vine..Vnpruned, dyes.1607Topsell Four-f. Beasts (1658) 477 The same part of his tail which is beneath the knot will die after such binding, and never have any sense in it again.1707Curios. in Husb. & Gard. 62 The Plant, grown dry and withered..must dy.c1820Shelley Autumn 2 The pale flowers are dying.1855Tennyson Maud vi. i. 6 The shining daffodils die.1869Huxley Phys. i. (ed. 3) 22 Individual cells of the epidermis and of the epithelium are incessantly dying and being cast off.
b. Said of the heart: To cease to beat; to sink as in swooning.
1611Bible 1 Sam. xxv. 37 His heart died within him, and he became as a stone.1771Smollett Humph. Cl. 26 June ⁋18 My heart seemed to die within me.1795Southey Joan of Arc i. 290 It might be seen..by the deadly paleness which ensued, How her heart died within her.
9. fig. Of substances: To lose force, strength, or active qualities, to become ‘dead’, flat, vapid, or inactive.
1612Webster White Devil iv. i, Best wine, Dying, makes strongest vinegar.1823P. Nicholson Pract. Build. 390 Plaster is said to die when it loses its strength.
10. a. Of actions, institutions, states, or qualities: To come to an end, pass out of existence; to go out, as a candle or fire; to pass out of memory, to be utterly forgotten.
a1240Lofsong in Cott. Hom. 211 Þine pinen buruwen me..from þene deað ðet neuer ne deieð.1387Trevisa Higden (Rolls) I. 7 (Mätz.) Dedes þat wolde deie, storye kepeþ hem euermore.c1420Pallad. on Husb. i. 600 As cornes that wol under growe her eye, That but thou lete hem oute, the sight wol die.1548Hall Chron., Edw. IV, 240 In whose person died the very surname of Plantagenet.1577B. Googe Heresbach's Husb. ii. (1586) 110 The coles that are made of the Pine tree..die not so fast as the other.1580Baret Alv. D 643 Loue vtterly dieth, or decaieth.1593Shakes. 3 Hen. VI, ii. vi. 1 Heere burnes my Candle out; I, heere it dies.1599Much Ado v. i. 301 So dies my reuenge.1710Prideaux Orig. Tithes v. 237 But he dying the same year he published them [Laws], they also dyed with him.1711Addison Spect. No. 26 ⁋5 When I look upon the Tombs of the great, every Emotion of Envy dies in me.1820Shelley Ode Liberty ix. 13 Art, which cannot die.1847Tennyson Princ. iii. 189 Speak, and let the topic die.1871Morley Voltaire (1886) 7 A fragile and secondary good which the world is very willing to let die.1892Du Maurier Peter Ibbetson 247 It is good that my secret must die with me.
b. Sometimes more directly fig. from 1.
1594Hooker Eccl. Pol. i. xvi. (1611) 50 All these controuersies might have dyed, the very day they were first brought foorth.1596Shakes. 1 Hen. IV, i. iii. 74 What euer Harry Percie then had said..May reasonably dye, and neuer rise To do him wrong.1601Twel. N. i. i. 3 The appetite may sicken, and so dye.1610Temp. ii. i. 216 Thou let'st thy fortune sleep: die rather.
11. To pass gradually away (esp. out of hearing or sight) by becoming fainter and fainter; to fade away.
[1581G. Pettie Guazzo's Civ. Conv. ii. (1586) 58 b, The fault of some, who suffer the last letters to die betweene their teeth.]1704Pope Windsor For. 266, I hear sweet music die along the grove.1715–20Iliad ii. 126 Fainter murmurs dy'd upon the ear.1826Disraeli Viv. Grey v. xii, The words died on Vivian's lips.1832Tennyson Miller's Dau. 74, I watch'd the little circles die.1859Elaine 323 The living smile Died from his lips.
12. a. To pass by dying (into something else); to change (into something) at death or termination.
1633Earl of Manchester Al Mondo (1636) 27 The brightest dayes dye into dark nights, but rise againe a mornings.1645Bp. Hall Remedy Discontents 20 The day dyes into night.1742Young Nt. Th. vi. 697 The world of matter, with its various forms, All dies into new life.1755Centaur ii. 87 He that lives in the kingdom of Sense shall die into the kingdom of Sorrow.1784Cowper Task ii. 96 The rivers die into offensive pools.1842Tennyson Day-Dream 188 The twilight died into the dark.
b. Archit. To merge into, lose itself by passing into; to terminate gradually in or against. Cf. 13 c.
1665J. Webb Stone-Heng (1725) 88 A Parapet..is let into, or made to die against the Columns.1859Jephson Brittany xviii. 291 The mouldings of the arches die into the pillars.1870F. R. Wilson Ch. Lindisf. 116 There is a staircase turret which dies into the tower.
III. With adverbs, forming compound verbs.
13. die away.
a. To pass away from life gradually; to faint or swoon away.
1707Curios. in Husb. & Gard. 62 We see several Plants grow dry, and dy away.1711Addison Spect. No. 3 ⁋7 She fainted and died away at the sight.1713Cato. iv. i, I die away with horror at the thought.1725Pope Odyss. xiv. 401 Oh! had he..in his friend's embraces dy'd away!1821Shelley Prometh. Unb. ii. ii. 21 Droops dying away On its mate's music-panting bosom.1853R. W. Browne Grk. Classical Lit. (1857) 138 My feeble pulse forgot to play, I fainted, sank, and died away.
b. To diminish gradually in force or activity and so come to an end; to fade away, cease or disappear gradually.
1680W. Hacke Collect. Voy. (1699) II. 15 The wind in the mean time dying away, I was becalmed.1706A. Bedford Temple Mus. ix. 172 The Voices..seem to die away.1712Steele Spect. No. 427 ⁋2 Thus groundless Stories die away.1792S. Rogers Pleas. Mem. ii. 91 At his feet the thunder dies away.1837Disraeli Venetia iii. vii, The day died away, and still he was wanting.1840R. H. Dana Bef. Mast xxv. 81 The breeze died away at night.1860Tyndall Glac. i. xxiv. 175 The direct shock of each avalanche had died away.
c. Archit. and Carpentry. To pass or merge gradually into the adjacent structure. Cf. 12 b.
1869E. J. Reed Ship-build. v. 76 To be 2 feet deep amidships and to extend across until they die away with rise of floor.1873Ferguson in Tristram Land of Moab 373 The arch must have died away against the towers.
d. trans. To cause to die or come to an end. rare—1.
1748Richardson Clarissa (1811) VIII. 33 By little and little, in such a gradual sensible death..God dies away in us, as I may say, all human satisfaction, in order to subdue his poor creatures to himself.
14. die back. Said of the recent shoot of a plant: To die from the apex back to the woody or perennial part.
Cf. die down; herbaceous plants die down to the ground, tender shoots die back to the old wood.
1850Beck's Florist Nov. 265 The shrub..will in a manner prune itself, or at least those shoots that require removing will die back, and there will be only the dead wood to cut away.1928F. T. Brooks Plant. Dis. xii. 201 Stone fruit trees often die back in association with the presence of various fungi.
15. die down.
a. To subside gradually into a dead or inactive state; to die away.
1834Keble in Lyra Apost. (1849) 58 The deep knell dying down.1859Tennyson Elaine 179 Laughter dying down as the great knight Approach'd them.1874Green Short Hist. vi. §1. 267 The war died down into mere massacre and brigandage.1894Antiquary May 222 The tin trade of Cornwall died down.Mod. The fire was left to die down of itself.
b. Of plants: To die down to the ground, while the underground stem and roots survive.
1895Home Garden 40 To secure perfect blooms [of Crocus], the foliage must be left to die down of its own accord.Mod. This Polygonum attains a height of ten feet, and yet dies down entirely in the winter.
16. die off.
a. To go off, be removed or carried off, one after another, by death.
1697W. Dampier Voy. I. 113 It is usual with sick men coming from the Sea Air to dye off as soon as ever they come within the view of the Land.1741Richardson Pamela (1742) III. 292 A Gentleman's Friends may die off.1807Southey Espriella's Lett. III. 100 The Russian soldiers..sickened and died off like rotten sheep.1840Dickens Barn. Rudge vii, Accustomed to wish with great emphasis that the whole race of women could but die off.1857Buckle Civiliz. I. xi. 649 That generation having died off.Mod. If the cattle and other stock are not sold off, they will die off. The cuttings in the frames damped off, the plants in the greenhouse died off.
b. transf. Of sounds, etc.: To die away, to pass away.
1722De Foe Plague (1884) 10 This Rumour died off again.1805Flinders in Phil. Trans. XCVI. 245 On the wind dying off..it descended quickly to 30 inches.1878Browning La Saisiaz 45 If the harsh throes of the prelude die not off into the swell.1886Sir F. Doyle Reminiscences 175 So the debate died off.
17. die out.
a. Of a family or race (of animals or plants): To be (gradually) extinguished by death; to become extinct.
1865Seeley Ecce Homo iv. (1866) 38 His house soon dies out.1866Mrs. Carlyle Lett. III. 306 So sad that one's family should die out.1875Jowett Plato (ed. 2) III. 163 Barbarous nations when they are introduced by Europeans to vice die out.1887F. B. Zincke Hist. Wherstead 173 They never bore any more fruit, and gradually died out.
b. To go out, or come to an end (gradually); to pass away or become extinct by degrees.
1853Kane Grinnell Exp. xxvii. (1856) 219 The lard-lamp died out in the course of the night.1872Freeman Gen. Sketch xii. §21. 232 In England villainage was on the whole dying out.1885Truth 11 June 936/2 Public interest had flagged and gradually died out.1887Athenæum 7 May 603/3 To tell how the religions of Greece and Rome died out.1892Du Maurier Peter Ibbetson 43 The last red streak dies out of the wet west.
18. die up. To die off entirely, to perish. Obs.
a1300Cursor M. 4703 (Cott.) Þan deid þe bestes vp biden, Thoru þe hunger þat was sa kene.c1340Ibid. 4831 (Trin.) Þe folke deȝeþ vp al by dene.1475Bk. Noblesse (1860) 42 His peple died up by gret mortalite of pestilence.1563–87Foxe A. & M. (1596) 76/1 Most part of the husbandmen..died up with the famine and pestilence.

Add:[II.] [8.] c. transf. Of an internal combustion engine: to cease to function, to stop running. Also with vehicle as subj.
1927C. A. Lindbergh We viii. 134 At 5,000 feet the engine sputtered and died.1970G. F. Newman Sir, You Bastard viii. 235 At ten past two Feast finally arrived home after running out of petrol; the gauge had indicated a quarter of a tank when it died.1986Road Sport Aug. 24/2 While queuing for the start the Manta died, but the marshals insisted that he start the stage on his due time.

Add:[I.] [3.] d. to die for: (as if) worth dying for; superlatively good or highly desirable; extraordinary. Also to die, fabulous, astonishing. colloq. (orig. and chiefly U.S.).
1898E. N. Westcott David Harum xxiii. 209 Oh! and to ‘top off’ with, a mince-pie to die for.1980G. B. Trudeau (title) A tad overweight, but violet eyes to die for.1982A. Maupin Further Tales of City 96 The guy had this incredible loft..with neon tubing over the bed and high-tech everything..to die, right?1986Philadelphia Inquirer 11 July e3/2 The dark chocolate is to die for—it actually tastes dark.1992M. Riva Marlene Dietrich 645 The things he said about Olivier..to die!1993Face Apr. 73/2 Lacroix and Lagerfeld remained the to-die-for labels.
IV. die, v.2
[f. die n.1]
trans. To furnish with a die; to mould or shape with a die.
1703T. N. City & C. Purchaser 213 The Sheathing-nail ought not to go through the Plank..and the Head must be well clasped, or died, so as it may sink into the Wood.1885Harper's Mag. LXX. 282 Every machine-made shoe also has an ‘inner sole’ died out or moulded, to correspond in shape with the ‘outer sole’.
V. die
obs. form of dye v. and n.
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